SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Nov 21, 2012
11/12
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thank you for joining us today. tell us about your background. >> my parents immigrated to the united states in the 1960's. i was the first kid born in the u.s. my parents sacrificed everything so that their kids could have the opportunities that they wanted when they came here. i grew up in the boston area and lived in different parts of boston. i went to catholic price school in dorchester, a section of boston. -- i went to catholic high school in dorchester, a section of boston. because of my parents, my brothers and i were all blessed to go to harvard university. that is where i went to school. it was intense. i stayed there for law school and have a master's in public policy from there. those are subjects i decided to study because i was interested in public service and public policy issues and government. >> you grew up in the boston area. what made you want to make the transition and moved to san francisco? what motivated you to get involved in politics question marks before i ran for office, and worked in sa
thank you for joining us today. tell us about your background. >> my parents immigrated to the united states in the 1960's. i was the first kid born in the u.s. my parents sacrificed everything so that their kids could have the opportunities that they wanted when they came here. i grew up in the boston area and lived in different parts of boston. i went to catholic price school in dorchester, a section of boston. -- i went to catholic high school in dorchester, a section of boston....
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Nov 24, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN2
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hopefully they won't just try to win us over every four years. [laughter] >> if i may, to a certain degree, it is relatively easy because of the republican party issues that keep coming up together, i am an equal opportunity critic and let me just say that in the second presidential debate, the town hall one, i actually thought the president barack obama's weakest moment was when the young woman stood up and asked him about equal pay for women. he rightfully talked about passing the lilly ledbetter fair pay act. then he abandoned that line of thinking and went on to talk about the economy. that is the moment where mitt romney and the binders full woman came up. [laughter] welcome me about that moment, for example, while the democrats and the president could point to this one act, this one piece of legislation, in truth, there isn't that much more. it is easy to say republicans no one in the political spectrum across the board has really done much -- well, besides you. [laughter] to do something about that. >> let me just say that there is pending
hopefully they won't just try to win us over every four years. [laughter] >> if i may, to a certain degree, it is relatively easy because of the republican party issues that keep coming up together, i am an equal opportunity critic and let me just say that in the second presidential debate, the town hall one, i actually thought the president barack obama's weakest moment was when the young woman stood up and asked him about equal pay for women. he rightfully talked about passing the lilly...
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Nov 3, 2012
11/12
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be sure to join us. [applause] last year, we had the wonderful opportunity of hearing ann coulter speak. when i think of ann, i think of the research done for two years preparing for the website, radio show, and our company, and we examined a phenomena, the renaissance of the conservative woman. conservative women are informed, engaged, articulate than ever before, and best of all, they irritate the left more than ever before. [applause] quite fun, quite entertaining. [laughter] when it comes to that particular sport of exaser rating liberals, there's no one better than ann coulter. [cheers and applause] got to love it. [applause] and since my husband did a brief stint as an executive with the world wrestling federation before becoming a producer at disney, there's a particular metaphor that comes to mind when you watch ann walk in with a liberal. it's the wwf smackdown. look at the cases from matt, katie, cheech and chong. [laughter] she pulled punches with that substance using challengers in that case,
be sure to join us. [applause] last year, we had the wonderful opportunity of hearing ann coulter speak. when i think of ann, i think of the research done for two years preparing for the website, radio show, and our company, and we examined a phenomena, the renaissance of the conservative woman. conservative women are informed, engaged, articulate than ever before, and best of all, they irritate the left more than ever before. [applause] quite fun, quite entertaining. [laughter] when it comes...
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Nov 29, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN2
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we want to maximize the use. it if we use the same plan with the rest of the company right now the same way, we probably be talking 6 to 700 more employees, and so we don't see the balance yet that we need increase the revenues necessary to pay for that compared to where we are right now with the reliability and we really looked at the premium service differently because the fears were higher in the process. >> okay. i didn't put this -- mention this before, but out of the report just for the record, amtrak's food and beverage service has incurred a direct operating loss of over $526 million in the last six years. a half of billion is not chump change, and just want that in the record. finally, . >> i think we had in the last record. i understand. >> finally, also, as recommended, and this is also from the report, the vice president of operations is agreed that amtrak will develop a five-year plan for reducing the direct operating losses. mr. boardman, can you shed some light on that? >> well, it goes back to the
we want to maximize the use. it if we use the same plan with the rest of the company right now the same way, we probably be talking 6 to 700 more employees, and so we don't see the balance yet that we need increase the revenues necessary to pay for that compared to where we are right now with the reliability and we really looked at the premium service differently because the fears were higher in the process. >> okay. i didn't put this -- mention this before, but out of the report just for...
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Nov 3, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN
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the number means a lot to us. what would you do and what more can and should washington do if anything to address the soaring cost of college debt students face. >> i went to public schools and a commuter college. i ended up as a professor. i got to do that because of the opportunities afforded me by a good education that america invested in. now we live in a world where there is far too little investment, and is typically in higher education. there are four great community colleges in this area. we need to be making the investments in the community colleges. for a couple of reasons. partly because it is a good, affordable way for kids to get an education. partly because it helps us build a future. persistent technology here in western massachusetts, this is a real opportunity for the future. only if there is a well-educated work force. that starts and home school, on into community colleges, and on into universities. i want to say this is about priorities. that is how i see it. there will not be a single, magic b
the number means a lot to us. what would you do and what more can and should washington do if anything to address the soaring cost of college debt students face. >> i went to public schools and a commuter college. i ended up as a professor. i got to do that because of the opportunities afforded me by a good education that america invested in. now we live in a world where there is far too little investment, and is typically in higher education. there are four great community colleges in...
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Nov 25, 2012
11/12
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how does that affect us? now, those of you who have read a little bit about natalie phillips' new work on jane austen, the brain, an english major looking into neuroscience, what she found is that the brain when it reads intensely -- what i call deep reading -- is, in fact, activating an extraordinary number of neurons. the realizing brain, however, can stop after 280 milliseconds and optionally give you a very nice but superficial surface reading. the ability to read in a deep fashion, to think about inference, to think about the print, to go beyond the tech to our own insights, this requires not only extra milliseconds in that a brain, but it requires years of concentrated thinking and comprehensive skills -- comprehension skills. my major worry is that as we move into this medium, we are going to be changing the circuit in ways that we do not at this moment understand. we are lurching at this moment in the textbook industry towards digitizing everything without the evidence to say this is right for this ti
how does that affect us? now, those of you who have read a little bit about natalie phillips' new work on jane austen, the brain, an english major looking into neuroscience, what she found is that the brain when it reads intensely -- what i call deep reading -- is, in fact, activating an extraordinary number of neurons. the realizing brain, however, can stop after 280 milliseconds and optionally give you a very nice but superficial surface reading. the ability to read in a deep fashion, to...
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Nov 25, 2012
11/12
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and at the same time, and i believe professor hill, you use this term, one of you use this term, about the relative invisibility of women as well. which i think a lot of people, a lot of women, they feel that contradiction on a day-to-day basis but i will fill the open to anyone who wants to start. how is it that with women still maintain an overall invisibili invisibility? >> well, we are most invisible at the tables where decisions are made about our lives. and i think that's the area where we really have work to do. there's a new world economic forum report that came out the other day that worldwide women have 20% of the political power. so if we are concerned about access to contraception. people are concerned about equal pay for equal work, we have to be at those tables. juno, you watch the news any night or open a newspaper, the huddles, the leaders are still largely male. you walk into a public building, whether it's the state house up the street here or the portraits on the walls are male. so women still do not see themselves reflected in the halls of power. now, you know, you
and at the same time, and i believe professor hill, you use this term, one of you use this term, about the relative invisibility of women as well. which i think a lot of people, a lot of women, they feel that contradiction on a day-to-day basis but i will fill the open to anyone who wants to start. how is it that with women still maintain an overall invisibili invisibility? >> well, we are most invisible at the tables where decisions are made about our lives. and i think that's the area...
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Nov 27, 2012
11/12
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FOXNEWSW
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. >> should we hone our use of drones? the new york times reports that prior to election day, the obama administration was developing a rule book for unmanned aircraft strikes on terrorists so that if romney won he would inherit clear guidelines. the issues are not as urgent now. obama won allegedly, but the administration is still pushing to formalize the rules and nail down exactly when deadly force is justified. they are debating whether drones should be a last resort against imminent threat to our country or something else like in pakistan where they are deployed against militants whose main grudge is with pakistani authoritiesment the president has miss givings telling one interviewer, quote, there is a remotist to it that helps us think somehow we can solve vexing security problems. for more, let's go live to qet red eye"'s correspondent chip herrington. >> i don't know how he got his security credentials. are we going too far with drones or not far enough? >> you are solving vexing security problems which is a nice
. >> should we hone our use of drones? the new york times reports that prior to election day, the obama administration was developing a rule book for unmanned aircraft strikes on terrorists so that if romney won he would inherit clear guidelines. the issues are not as urgent now. obama won allegedly, but the administration is still pushing to formalize the rules and nail down exactly when deadly force is justified. they are debating whether drones should be a last resort against imminent...
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Nov 15, 2012
11/12
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LINKTV
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it's a gamble boston needs to make using someone else's money. they desperately need jobs to combat poverty. it's 1994, and the cy has just enter a competition. but unlike this friendly street game, the stakes for boston are high, and the clock is ticking. cities across the country are vying for new federal grants for something called an "empowerment zone"-- a special area of the worst poverty. f spearhead boston's forts,. e yor enlisted geographer linda haar. with the community to establish our empowerment zone plan,k i sat back and started to think about boston from the perspective of a geographer, which is my training, and i've looked at boston along spatial lines. narrator: to help do that, haar's team uses a geographic iormation sysm map relative verty levelsfor . unfortunately, there are too many poor neighborhoods that qualify. there are many ways to draw the empowermt zone boundary that will decide who can and cannot receive the employment training, developmenmoneand jobs. busome of e choices stand out. haar: you can really define who liv
it's a gamble boston needs to make using someone else's money. they desperately need jobs to combat poverty. it's 1994, and the cy has just enter a competition. but unlike this friendly street game, the stakes for boston are high, and the clock is ticking. cities across the country are vying for new federal grants for something called an "empowerment zone"-- a special area of the worst poverty. f spearhead boston's forts,. e yor enlisted geographer linda haar. with the community to...
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Nov 3, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN2
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take us back to your gm questions. and you need to have the capabilities of society to repurpose out of was released when something dies, when something old false, but there has not been enough of that in a place like pakistan or egypt. i think it gets to the point you're talking about. >> philip auerswald, what to teach at george mason? >> welcome to teach economics and social entrepreneurship. i've been in business school. i teach that a regular entrepreneurship. i'm a believer as a transformative source in society. but a transformative about thinking how to address public challenges in the notch gregorio manor, potentially envision new ventures company pathways to make the most of that. so there are a lot of folks in this book you might save oaks are familiar, i think of them as such rigorous, but that's what i focus on. is a great teaching area. i love this environment. i've got colleagues at tyler cowen have a great on economics a lot of other colleagues in different disciplines. lily shall he really deserves a sh
take us back to your gm questions. and you need to have the capabilities of society to repurpose out of was released when something dies, when something old false, but there has not been enough of that in a place like pakistan or egypt. i think it gets to the point you're talking about. >> philip auerswald, what to teach at george mason? >> welcome to teach economics and social entrepreneurship. i've been in business school. i teach that a regular entrepreneurship. i'm a believer as...
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Nov 19, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN2
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tell us about that. how does it really change the black movement or just the way that people proceed? >> what does it do to the black community and white liberalism? what happens? >> the white liberalism what it does is they were shoulder to shoulder with blacks in the south and some of them have killed and after a while it is a setback. they are not non-violent people, they are hoodlums. they were burn baby burn. they were fighting the police and burning buildings and so, this sort of makes people cautious. they are not really sure what is happening here and they don't like what they see. i'm not saying that they give up on the freedom struggle. johnson doesn't give up on the freedom struggle and he continues to try to get legislation after this and he is staggered by this, how could this happen? he's done more than anybody by far, and he was just really shaken by this. but even johnson realized this enormously powerful speech at harvard university where he teach at the convention in june written by dan
tell us about that. how does it really change the black movement or just the way that people proceed? >> what does it do to the black community and white liberalism? what happens? >> the white liberalism what it does is they were shoulder to shoulder with blacks in the south and some of them have killed and after a while it is a setback. they are not non-violent people, they are hoodlums. they were burn baby burn. they were fighting the police and burning buildings and so, this sort...
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katie marzullo joins us from the newsroom. two -- >> reporter: captured on video still open to interpretation. the police chief says the officer was within his rights to use the nonlethal force the man says the video shows he was not resisting arrest this is the video he posted on youtube, the man in the bottom left of the screen. you see him put his hands up, get on his knees, turn his head and say something and then he goes down, hit from behind by a taser. this happened in october of we have len as -- october of 2010 well 11. police wanted him for -- 10 felony counts. his civil attorney says the severity of the charges doesn't justify what police did. >> now he's on his hands and knees. you are now going to say we had a right to tase you because a minute or two before that you didn't instantaneously get on your hands and knees and put your hands in the air. that is not a excuse. >> reporter: police chief says the video does not show what happened in the minutes before the incident and you can't hear what was said. he says i
katie marzullo joins us from the newsroom. two -- >> reporter: captured on video still open to interpretation. the police chief says the officer was within his rights to use the nonlethal force the man says the video shows he was not resisting arrest this is the video he posted on youtube, the man in the bottom left of the screen. you see him put his hands up, get on his knees, turn his head and say something and then he goes down, hit from behind by a taser. this happened in october of...
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Nov 24, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN2
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employs us. occupying and, living in whatever appeals to us, and yet in so many ways and cases, we choose the urban life. we choose the inconveniences and the high cost of living in urban areas despite the fact that 20 years ago it was predicted that all this new technology would make cities obsolete. yet, google, which of all the companies in the world, with a few? rebuild the google collects. silicon valley. the most famous geographic cluster in the world is also the industry that is the most technologically savvy. why is it that all of this new technology, far from making contact in the city, seems to be hyper charging the city? this relatively rosy view is very unlike the new york of my youth. i was born in manhattan in 1967. i say that rarely in the boston public library, but i was. these are two images from my youth. we have similar images of new york and boston in the 1970s as well. the bottom image is gerald ford denying new york for a successful bailout. indeed, new york was very much he
employs us. occupying and, living in whatever appeals to us, and yet in so many ways and cases, we choose the urban life. we choose the inconveniences and the high cost of living in urban areas despite the fact that 20 years ago it was predicted that all this new technology would make cities obsolete. yet, google, which of all the companies in the world, with a few? rebuild the google collects. silicon valley. the most famous geographic cluster in the world is also the industry that is the most...
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Nov 3, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN2
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the policeman helped us down to the mini and drove us back to our house and took us to the end of the drive. probably best if you don't talk about this to your sister. said my father. i didn't want to talk about it to anybody. i found a special place, made a new friend and lost my comic and i was holding an old-fashioned silver 6 pence in my hand. what makes the ocean different to the seat? bigger said my father. and ocean is much bigger. why? just thinking. could you have an ocean as small as a pond? no. said my fodder. ponds are pond size, wakes on lake sized, seize our seas and oceans are oceans. atlantic, pacific, indian, arctic was all of the ocean there are. my father went up to his bed room to talk to my mom and be on the phone up there. i dropped the 6 pence in to my piggybacking. was the kind of china piggybacking from which nothing could be removed. one day when it could hold no more coins i would be allowed to break it. it was far from something. [applause] and after that, things get weird. it actually -- it was a very strange book to write. because it really wasn't until i
the policeman helped us down to the mini and drove us back to our house and took us to the end of the drive. probably best if you don't talk about this to your sister. said my father. i didn't want to talk about it to anybody. i found a special place, made a new friend and lost my comic and i was holding an old-fashioned silver 6 pence in my hand. what makes the ocean different to the seat? bigger said my father. and ocean is much bigger. why? just thinking. could you have an ocean as small as...
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Nov 18, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN2
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like us. to enter act withoo
like us. to enter act withoo
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Nov 4, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN2
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long enough for us to maneuver. think about the law but that takes. while ahmad that for a minute, somebody's going to ask this question from going to quit and take it away from you. dr. watkins and had to go from being a sniper to being a doctor? how do you go from being a sniper to being a chiropractor? to have to ask the question means you don't know the heart of special operative part of a man like this. people don't become sealed the people go by, task forces 61 putts because what the wind up killing machines. they do that out of love. they do that out of love for their fellow men. they do it because i want to be in the position to save your life, if the time to ever really bad and somebody needs to come get you. i don't want to do because i want to go kill bad guys. i want to do because i want to be the one making a difference, helping out, but my life the line for you. so by the same token that i was a sniper, willing to die for you, i could be a good doctor willing to help you because it's all love. but the
long enough for us to maneuver. think about the law but that takes. while ahmad that for a minute, somebody's going to ask this question from going to quit and take it away from you. dr. watkins and had to go from being a sniper to being a doctor? how do you go from being a sniper to being a chiropractor? to have to ask the question means you don't know the heart of special operative part of a man like this. people don't become sealed the people go by, task forces 61 putts because what the wind...
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Nov 25, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN2
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tell us about that. how does it really change the black movement or just the way people perceive civil rights. i guess another way of putting it is what does it do to the black community? what does it do to equate liberalism? >> guest: to white liberalism, but it does is other white liberals were shoulder to shoulder with blacks in the south. some of them got killed. after a while, a lot of them sat back and said these guys are not christlike, nonviolent civil rights people. they are hoodlums. they are burn baby burn. they are bad people fighting police. in the burn down buildings. so, this sort of makes a lot of white people cautious and they're not really sure what is happening here and they don't like what they see. i am not saying that they give up on freedom struggle. johnson doesn't give up on the freedom struggle. he continues to get legislation and initially stack. like how could this happen. he done within a president by fire for civil rights and it happened under his watch. he was just really s
tell us about that. how does it really change the black movement or just the way people perceive civil rights. i guess another way of putting it is what does it do to the black community? what does it do to equate liberalism? >> guest: to white liberalism, but it does is other white liberals were shoulder to shoulder with blacks in the south. some of them got killed. after a while, a lot of them sat back and said these guys are not christlike, nonviolent civil rights people. they are...
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Nov 25, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN2
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employs us. occupying in whatever spot appeals to our biofill ya, and yet in so many cases we choose urban life. we choose the inconveniences, the high cost of living in urban areas despite the fact that all this new technology would make cities obsolete, it was predicted, and yet bag google wt do they do? they build the google plex so that their workers can be right next to one another. silicon valley, right? practically the most famous geographic cluster in the world, it's also the industry that is the most technologically savvy. why is it that all this new technology seems to be hypercharging our cities? now, this relatively rosy view of cities is very unlike the new york of my youth. these -- i was born in manhattan in the 1967. i say that warily in the boston public library. [laughter] but i was. and these are two iconic images from my youth. we could have similar images of new york -- of boston in the 970s as well. the bottom image is of gerald ford denying new york's request for a fiscal b
employs us. occupying in whatever spot appeals to our biofill ya, and yet in so many cases we choose urban life. we choose the inconveniences, the high cost of living in urban areas despite the fact that all this new technology would make cities obsolete, it was predicted, and yet bag google wt do they do? they build the google plex so that their workers can be right next to one another. silicon valley, right? practically the most famous geographic cluster in the world, it's also the industry...
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146
Nov 4, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN2
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how you used it to deport people. we saw what happened in the 1920s when folks came in, of course, and helped keep your economy alive when it was booming, and then when the economy busted in 1929, mr. hoover deported them all. we saw what happened in the war, all immigrants came in, kept fields and factories and mines alive, and then in 1954, mr. eisenhower, another great military leader, allowedded one of the same people from that expedition against poncho to begin to round up immigrants. in 1954, the same year a young man, your age, a young man whose family fled poe land because of the holocaust, went to canada, came into new york as someone seeking freedom and exile, someone who understood the beauty of the american dream. in 1959, reportedly, that's when tom horn got his citizenship. our attorney general, the same here hundreds of thousands of mexicans and mexican-americans and their children were deported in operations. it's not about immigration, jeff, she told me. do you understand that? it's not about immigrat
how you used it to deport people. we saw what happened in the 1920s when folks came in, of course, and helped keep your economy alive when it was booming, and then when the economy busted in 1929, mr. hoover deported them all. we saw what happened in the war, all immigrants came in, kept fields and factories and mines alive, and then in 1954, mr. eisenhower, another great military leader, allowedded one of the same people from that expedition against poncho to begin to round up immigrants. in...
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Nov 7, 2012
11/12
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KOFY
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katie marzullo joins us from the newsroom. two -- >> reporter: captured on video still open to interpretation. the police chief says the officer was within his rights to use the nonlethal force the man says the video shows he was not resisting arrest this is the video he posted on youtube, the man in the bottom left of the screen. you see him put his hands up, get on his knees, turn his head and say something and then he goes down, hit from behind by a taser. this happened in october of we have len as -- october of 2010 well 11. police wanted him for -- 10 felony counts. his civil attorney says the severity of the charges doesn't justify what police did. >> now he's on his hands and knees. you are now going to say we had a right to tase you because a minute or two before that you didn't instantaneously get on your hands and knees and put your hands in the air. that is not a excuse. >> reporter: police chief says the video does not show what happened in the minutes before the incident and you can't hear what was said. he says i
katie marzullo joins us from the newsroom. two -- >> reporter: captured on video still open to interpretation. the police chief says the officer was within his rights to use the nonlethal force the man says the video shows he was not resisting arrest this is the video he posted on youtube, the man in the bottom left of the screen. you see him put his hands up, get on his knees, turn his head and say something and then he goes down, hit from behind by a taser. this happened in october of...
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149
Nov 19, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN2
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using 1965 as the eve of destruction. i am a conservative for the sake of argument to get to me, 1965 looks like destruction itself. it was media 1964 but everything you talked about this is the world gone to held in a handbasket. there's a few of these you almost assume the share assumption. >> there is. this is 65 is destruction, this is the great society. this is the state run mad in 1965. this is the voting rights act. now we are about to have a federal government in effect seat in the americans' health and get involved in elections until this very day and some people would have said 1965 that really they started voting and it wasn't that big of a deal that soon they were voting in the cities, the rural areas were not that important anymore and they were increasingly less important. and so had this not been done, the arc of change reflects that they would have their voting rights and technically always had so 65 itself is the imposition of the liberal state. on the other hand and my progressive friends say the eve of
using 1965 as the eve of destruction. i am a conservative for the sake of argument to get to me, 1965 looks like destruction itself. it was media 1964 but everything you talked about this is the world gone to held in a handbasket. there's a few of these you almost assume the share assumption. >> there is. this is 65 is destruction, this is the great society. this is the state run mad in 1965. this is the voting rights act. now we are about to have a federal government in effect seat in...
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Nov 5, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN2
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no one told us. we did know what was happening at the plant to the rumor in the neighborhood was that the plant was operated by dow chemical and it went out there making household cleaning supplies. my mother thought they were making scrubbing bubbles, and it was really apparent for quite a long time what was actually going on. and what happened at rocky flats now is that there has been a cleanup and a very controversial cleanup, controversial levels of contamination remaining in the soil, and 1300 acres of that site are still profoundly contaminated that they can never ever be open for human habitation. and the rest of the site is slated to open as a national wildlife refuge for hiking and biking and possibly hunting. so even though there's still a great deal of contamination on the site and there's a lot of homebuilding and shopping malls and highways in all sorts of things going on out there. so i felt that even though in colorado and the country as a whole i think would like to forget that rocky
no one told us. we did know what was happening at the plant to the rumor in the neighborhood was that the plant was operated by dow chemical and it went out there making household cleaning supplies. my mother thought they were making scrubbing bubbles, and it was really apparent for quite a long time what was actually going on. and what happened at rocky flats now is that there has been a cleanup and a very controversial cleanup, controversial levels of contamination remaining in the soil, and...
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102
Nov 22, 2012
11/12
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eye 102
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tell us more about it. this is persuasion, different than sangria combo price is learning and understanding what is the obstacle for this person is there something about what i understand my life and may experience to open up the possibility they would vote with us. it's extraordinary. .. the. >> let folks are going to lose this opportunity for same-sex marriage. the reality of it is that, you know, first of all, there are black people. there are black people who happen to be clear. >> imagine that. [laughter] >> there are black queer people and people who are not clear who actually support fairness and equality and don't believe in discrimination. like my mother. my mother is just a regular person, you know, she is not political. but what she said right after the election was, well, this is really a civil rights issue and that people are using the bible to confuse the matter. and i thought, yeah, that is so true. it is true. it really is a civil rights matter. the truth is that it is a civil rights issue y
tell us more about it. this is persuasion, different than sangria combo price is learning and understanding what is the obstacle for this person is there something about what i understand my life and may experience to open up the possibility they would vote with us. it's extraordinary. .. the. >> let folks are going to lose this opportunity for same-sex marriage. the reality of it is that, you know, first of all, there are black people. there are black people who happen to be clear....
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Nov 6, 2012
11/12
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KICU
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neighbors questioned why officers didn't use a taser. police say because the man was coming after his wife, officers used an appropriate level of force. >>> ktvu joined other businesses today to present a donation to the widow of a fallen highway patrol officer. karen young strum accepted a check for $26,000 at a ceremony in walnut kreevenlth the donors included chevron and ktvu/kicu represent by our general manager. it was two months ago when officer kenyon jung trum was shot and killed. today's event was organized by the charity group police and fire fallen he rows. >>> a gas leak in san francisco prompted evacuation this morning at pear 15. investigators say construction crew struck a gas line about 10:00 in the morning. fire officials say pier 15 was evacuated. the leak was capped in about 45 minutes. the evacuation was lift and had streets were reopened around noon. >>> a busy intersection in san francisco's north beach was water logged briefly today. the pse says contractor struck a water main valve. ktvu's news chopper 2 was above
neighbors questioned why officers didn't use a taser. police say because the man was coming after his wife, officers used an appropriate level of force. >>> ktvu joined other businesses today to present a donation to the widow of a fallen highway patrol officer. karen young strum accepted a check for $26,000 at a ceremony in walnut kreevenlth the donors included chevron and ktvu/kicu represent by our general manager. it was two months ago when officer kenyon jung trum was shot and...
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Nov 23, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 87
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all of us have good reason to be alarmed at the u.s. population rate since the nation's number have been increasing at such an remarkable pace. with no european rival to contend with, nothing stood in the way at the doubling of u.s. lands in every doubling of the u.s. population except for thousands of indians who continued to live on their native ground. the united states thus provided a perfect object lesson for claims that x. is population fueled territorial aggression. in what i need your any euro american size of virtuous cycle that many native americans and their british allies sophomores a vicious circle, the continent's wide-open grounds supported demographic expansion even as the increasing u.s. population in a bold seizure and settlement of these lands. the resulting dif urchins in british versus american attitude towards american populations significantly increased tensions between the two nations on the end of the war and if that president thomas jefferson who was the architect of doubling of the nations louisiana purchase h
all of us have good reason to be alarmed at the u.s. population rate since the nation's number have been increasing at such an remarkable pace. with no european rival to contend with, nothing stood in the way at the doubling of u.s. lands in every doubling of the u.s. population except for thousands of indians who continued to live on their native ground. the united states thus provided a perfect object lesson for claims that x. is population fueled territorial aggression. in what i need your...
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91
Nov 7, 2012
11/12
by
KNTV
tv
eye 91
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he supports policy and legislation that benefits us. it benefits the nation. >> reporter: pete stark is 80 years old and has served in congress the last 40 years. we did try to talk to stark, he would not grant us an interview. he got in his car and he drove off. now, this is the new 15th district. it has been redrawn. it now includes dublin, pleasanton, livermore, castro valley, and several other cities. reporting from pleasanton for nbc bay area news. >> also returning to the house, oakland representative barbara lee. she wins a decisive victory over marilyn singleton to keep her seat, and we spoke to lee about what is next for congress. >> the american people are going to demand democrats and republicans, independents, come together on behalf of the american people. i look forward to continuing to work with our democratic caucus and really figure out, you know, strategies to make sure that they don't keep saying no. that we figure out how to break that logjam. >> lee went on to add, the newly re-elected president obama is bringing th
he supports policy and legislation that benefits us. it benefits the nation. >> reporter: pete stark is 80 years old and has served in congress the last 40 years. we did try to talk to stark, he would not grant us an interview. he got in his car and he drove off. now, this is the new 15th district. it has been redrawn. it now includes dublin, pleasanton, livermore, castro valley, and several other cities. reporting from pleasanton for nbc bay area news. >> also returning to the...
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131
Nov 6, 2012
11/12
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KPIX
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eye 131
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ben's mom uses it around the bathtub. it kills mold, and unlike clorox clean-up, it's approved to keep it from coming back for up to a week. share your lysol story, and see more, on facebook. but there's one on the way. a nor- easter is expected tt new york a >>> just what the people who survived sands don't sandy don't need, another big store. but a nor'easter is expected to hit new york and new jersey tomorrow. there could be heavy rain and 60-mile-an-hour winds. and that would be a problem for crews trying to restore to a miami homes and businesses. -- to a million homes and businesses. more flooding may happen on the coast. >>> new york and new jersey are trying to make sure victims of sandy are able to vote. people in both states are being allowed to cast ballots at any polling place. ballots are being distributed to some emergency shelters and shuttle buses are taking people to polling places. >>> $30 for a gallon of gas? that's what's turning up on craigslist in new york and new jersey. but price gouging is illegal
ben's mom uses it around the bathtub. it kills mold, and unlike clorox clean-up, it's approved to keep it from coming back for up to a week. share your lysol story, and see more, on facebook. but there's one on the way. a nor- easter is expected tt new york a >>> just what the people who survived sands don't sandy don't need, another big store. but a nor'easter is expected to hit new york and new jersey tomorrow. there could be heavy rain and 60-mile-an-hour winds. and that would be a...
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Nov 7, 2012
11/12
by
MSNBCW
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eye 123
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so:i should take that back you didn't lie to us. but you misled us. all we know by 9:00 is a bunch of senate races. wh know basically nothing about the presidential race at this hour. >> except i think the the south is notáç called. thethern battlegrounds are not called. thatof the l learning big demographic story to be told here that you're seeing. keeping t race so close. the president perhaps doing better with hispanics than four years ago. the fact that you know the southern races aren't called, that isn't what boston wanted to have by 9:00. so they can feel good that ohio and pennsylvania haven't been called either, but we do know pennsylvania that the preside we just wantthere. and l you, some of the little in ohio john yang is in hamilton county. that's the big c it was a bush county iwe don't have a lot of raw vote in yet. a little bit. but as john yang was telling us in the early vote and that's what this is this is all earlyt county. and the president had a big 16,000-vote that's a big- the president!é to essentially dupur years ago and h
so:i should take that back you didn't lie to us. but you misled us. all we know by 9:00 is a bunch of senate races. wh know basically nothing about the presidential race at this hour. >> except i think the the south is notáç called. thethern battlegrounds are not called. thatof the l learning big demographic story to be told here that you're seeing. keeping t race so close. the president perhaps doing better with hispanics than four years ago. the fact that you know the southern races...
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Nov 26, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN2
tv
eye 257
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and their own documents in their own words produce for us to look at. so it is an unusual experience to be able to do this. even though it's a pain in the. spent my name is steve jacobson. first of all, i don't know why, how anybody would believe anything the fbi says. secondly, it's kind of a key time here with the occupy movement has arrived, and this discrediting of iop can make a lot of present-day activists distrustful, paranoid, whatever. and i went to a meeting, i'm finishing. i went to a meeting 10 days ago with 200, mostly 60s activists, including myself. bobby seale, a lot of black panthers. and to a t., no one believes this, they all feel you have been used by the fbi to discredit aoki. and in other words, i'm not saying you are guilty but i'm saying you're being used by the fbi. everybody believes that. i'm just saying, defend himself, that's all. >> okay, i'm happy to respond to that. well, i spent a lot of time examining fbi records. i studied the fbi records, key procedures, and i've been very careful in doing my research. i think i descr
and their own documents in their own words produce for us to look at. so it is an unusual experience to be able to do this. even though it's a pain in the. spent my name is steve jacobson. first of all, i don't know why, how anybody would believe anything the fbi says. secondly, it's kind of a key time here with the occupy movement has arrived, and this discrediting of iop can make a lot of present-day activists distrustful, paranoid, whatever. and i went to a meeting, i'm finishing. i went to...
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you elected us to focus on your jobs, not ours. in the coming weeks and months, i am looking forward to reaching out and working with leaders of both parties to meet the challenges we can only solve together, reducing our deaf tau sit, reforming our tax code, fixing our immigration system, freeing ourselves from foreign oil. we've got more work to do. >> this is a time of great challenges for america, and i pray that the president will be successful in guiding our nation. >> all right, now on to the house and senate. >> republicans lost three key seats tonight in the u.s. senate where democrats remain in control. they have 52 seats. republicans have 44. >> three senate races are undecided tonight, a total of 10gop seats were at stake. >> and the house is staying in republican hands with 231 republicans and 184 democrats. 20 seats are still a toss up as we speak, but democrats needed to i can p up 25 seats to gain control of the house. >> we want to take you back to the presidential race. of course barack obama say vorring -- savori
you elected us to focus on your jobs, not ours. in the coming weeks and months, i am looking forward to reaching out and working with leaders of both parties to meet the challenges we can only solve together, reducing our deaf tau sit, reforming our tax code, fixing our immigration system, freeing ourselves from foreign oil. we've got more work to do. >> this is a time of great challenges for america, and i pray that the president will be successful in guiding our nation. >> all...
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91
Nov 22, 2012
11/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 91
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and also, this whole concept gives us -- it gives us a conflict in a way because we think that there's maybe 100 head impacts in a youth player per season and at the high school level 3600 to 1000, some unlike that, studies have shown. is it okay that we believe the long-term risk is cumulative and risk-based? is it okay then to a thousand head a year, but it's not okay to have 100? the nature of football and other sports bring in some natural difficult questions. at pop warner, we instituted this year for the first time the first level at the time, we announced in june that we would have no had contact in the devcon pectorals of any type, over a third of the practice time. so to be critical and say that we have 500% more than the nfl is a little bit not addressing the positive steps we try to take in acknowledging them and comparing that to other levels of play. so i think we really looked forward to the results of this year where monitoring more than we've ever done and will have a very good survey of 18,000 coaches and concussion and we hope to have a better idea after this season n
and also, this whole concept gives us -- it gives us a conflict in a way because we think that there's maybe 100 head impacts in a youth player per season and at the high school level 3600 to 1000, some unlike that, studies have shown. is it okay that we believe the long-term risk is cumulative and risk-based? is it okay then to a thousand head a year, but it's not okay to have 100? the nature of football and other sports bring in some natural difficult questions. at pop warner, we instituted...
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122
Nov 29, 2012
11/12
by
CSPAN2
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this provides us. back in 2008 and 2009 when everybody had the tremendous financial crisis and the collapse in the collapsing of economic output, we steamed ahead in canada with our so- called stimulus program and economic access plan where we identified thousands of projects we wanted to continue. because we wanted to do it quickly, we did shortcuts around regulatory processes. we took a risk. in 19 -- 19 -- 99 put 9% of cases, it made no difference that be made the short cuts. we found smoother processes with in the country. i would hope -- there is nothing like an emergency to tell you whether a process is necessary. >> absolutely. there is another thing that has been important to you that i want to ask you about. that is the detroit bridge. a ballot measure that would require a constitutional amendment failed. why is it important enough to canada that you agreed to pay your share and our share? in terms of individual projects between canada and the united states, it is the biggest economic relation
this provides us. back in 2008 and 2009 when everybody had the tremendous financial crisis and the collapse in the collapsing of economic output, we steamed ahead in canada with our so- called stimulus program and economic access plan where we identified thousands of projects we wanted to continue. because we wanted to do it quickly, we did shortcuts around regulatory processes. we took a risk. in 19 -- 19 -- 99 put 9% of cases, it made no difference that be made the short cuts. we found...
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417
Nov 7, 2012
11/12
by
KOFY
tv
eye 417
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they want us and write us and tell us and choose does the food have gm o ingredient. >> family paying more money at the grocery stories about the state paying more money to regulate this up to 1 million dollars a year. we have said from the beginning voters need to look in the details of prop 37. >> no on 37 opponent said measure is misleading and cost food growers money and create a lot of red tape. other country require food labeling. we'll see if california will join them. night is still young. >> live in san francisco tonight. >> thanks so much. gentleman here's a look at some other important state propa significance. prop 36 revise california 3 strike law. right now it is ahead 68 percent to 32 percent saying no. >> death penalty would be abolished and replaced with life sentences in california fv voters pass proposition 34. at this moment it is losing. 14 percent of the precinct reporting no. 57 percent on proposition 34 to repeal the death penalty in the state. >>> we are also posting real time results on the state proposition at our web site. our web site is updated the moment
they want us and write us and tell us and choose does the food have gm o ingredient. >> family paying more money at the grocery stories about the state paying more money to regulate this up to 1 million dollars a year. we have said from the beginning voters need to look in the details of prop 37. >> no on 37 opponent said measure is misleading and cost food growers money and create a lot of red tape. other country require food labeling. we'll see if california will join them. night...
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Nov 12, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 70
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pakistanis also have a narrative which is the americans use us and discarded. to use this against the russians in the 1980s, toss us out ostensibly because of nuclear proliferation in 1990. they use us in the war after 9/11 but after 2014 they're going to go away. you can count on. that is pakistanis think americans are hardwired to desert them. this set of stereotypes is intellectually lazy and very pernicious. one way to get out of this would be what hussein polk county, my counterpart suggest, time for fa divorce. or what others who shall remain nameless have said in the press, it's time for content, it's time to push this way. those two i think are not reasonable alternative. steve hadley has said remaining engaged with pakistan, there's no alternative to which. but i would argue that having a focus center on a bilateral relationship with something that's been a problem for us, what we need to do is to break out of this bilateralism, if you will, this sterile debate and look at the issues that are crosscutting, the issues that have to do with pakistan's rel
pakistanis also have a narrative which is the americans use us and discarded. to use this against the russians in the 1980s, toss us out ostensibly because of nuclear proliferation in 1990. they use us in the war after 9/11 but after 2014 they're going to go away. you can count on. that is pakistanis think americans are hardwired to desert them. this set of stereotypes is intellectually lazy and very pernicious. one way to get out of this would be what hussein polk county, my counterpart...
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102
Nov 29, 2012
11/12
by
CSPAN2
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for us to be potentially using that differently so yes, we are there. we are looking at it. i don't have the specifics and what our plans are right now but i understand your concern. >> if possible i would like to set up a meeting with your people so we could at least get, make sure we are at least seeing it from the same church on the same day. so we can get some kind of you know, and i think it's just something that concerns us greatly. we just want to know where amtrak is fitting in there and what your plans are. thank you. >> thank you. other members have questions? no other questions? well, let me just as we conclude thank our witnesses. the purpose of this hearing and the two that we are planning is hopefully to be constructive comment to make certain that things move forward in a positive fashion as far as amtrak. taxpayers have a huge amount of interest in this $1.4 billion as i said last year. billions of dollars over the 40 years that we have subsidized the amtrak operation. almost all public transportation is subsidized in some fashion. we ma
for us to be potentially using that differently so yes, we are there. we are looking at it. i don't have the specifics and what our plans are right now but i understand your concern. >> if possible i would like to set up a meeting with your people so we could at least get, make sure we are at least seeing it from the same church on the same day. so we can get some kind of you know, and i think it's just something that concerns us greatly. we just want to know where amtrak is fitting in...
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112
Nov 8, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN2
tv
eye 112
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thank you all of you for joining us. around us applause, please. [applause] >> i want my fiction to be intensely journalistic, intensely journalistic because unless you get out and look at what's going on, these days you're going to miss the things influencing yourself and everybody else. >> yesterday, the national journal has a comprehensive look at the 2012 election results, the impact on congress and executive branch, k street and policy for the next four years. panelists included national journal political staff, pollsters, lobbyist and former congressional leaders. up next, former utah senator, robert bennett, former representative set of six and phil sharpe discuss what lies ahead for the president and congress as they try to tackle the fiscal cliff during the lame-duck session. and following that panel, notable political analyst charlie cook is joined by two pollsters to examine the many polls and surveys prior to and after election day. >> so i will launch rate in. they spent a huge amount of discussion last night and this morning about and
thank you all of you for joining us. around us applause, please. [applause] >> i want my fiction to be intensely journalistic, intensely journalistic because unless you get out and look at what's going on, these days you're going to miss the things influencing yourself and everybody else. >> yesterday, the national journal has a comprehensive look at the 2012 election results, the impact on congress and executive branch, k street and policy for the next four years. panelists...
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91
Nov 25, 2012
11/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 91
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tell us how they have locked horns over this? >> guest: so this has to be one of the oldest debates in thinking about history or social science, the debate that predates the idea that there is such a thing as social science but if you go back to plato or marks, the idea that social forces are what explain human outcomes. the people were there. we are just different people and they died of a heart attack and replaced by someone else. what happened is something that really mattered would have ended up the same. in the essay which is in theory about napoleon he barely mentioned napoleon. it's all about the social force and so this essentially is to quote samuels from an ip has become history without proper nouns. no people involved. on the other hand carlisle makes the most extreme opposite position and he says history is nothing but the biographies of great men. so it seek easily characters at the great man in history. these are two fundamentally incompatible viewpoints. you can get further apart in your view of the world in these
tell us how they have locked horns over this? >> guest: so this has to be one of the oldest debates in thinking about history or social science, the debate that predates the idea that there is such a thing as social science but if you go back to plato or marks, the idea that social forces are what explain human outcomes. the people were there. we are just different people and they died of a heart attack and replaced by someone else. what happened is something that really mattered would...
119
119
Nov 13, 2012
11/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 119
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tell us more about it. this is persuasion, different than sangria combo price is learning and understanding what is the obstacle for this person is there something about what i understand my life and may experience to open up the possibility they would vote with us. it's extraordinary. .. the. >> let folks are going to lose this opportunity for same-sex marriage. the reality of it is that, you know, first of all, there are black people. there are black people who happen to be clear. >> imagine that. [laughter] >> there are black queer people and people who are not clear who actually support fairness and equality and don't believe in discrimination. like my mother. my mother is just a regular person, you know, she is not political. but what she said right after the election was, well, this is really a civil rights issue and that people are using the bible to confuse the matter. and i thought, yeah, that is so true. it is true. it really is a civil rights matter. the truth is that it is a civil rights issue y
tell us more about it. this is persuasion, different than sangria combo price is learning and understanding what is the obstacle for this person is there something about what i understand my life and may experience to open up the possibility they would vote with us. it's extraordinary. .. the. >> let folks are going to lose this opportunity for same-sex marriage. the reality of it is that, you know, first of all, there are black people. there are black people who happen to be clear....
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132
Nov 10, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN2
tv
eye 132
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pakistanis have a narrative that they use us and discard us. use us against the russians in the 1980s, toss us because because of nuclear proliferation in 1990. they use us in the war after 9/11, but after 20 # 14, they are going to go away. you can count on it. pakistanis think americans are hard wired to desert them. this set of stereotypes is intellectually lazy and pernicious. a way to get out of this is haqqani, my counterpart, was the ambassador here, suggest the, time for a divorce, and others who said it's time for containment, push it away. those two are not reasonable alternatives. remaining engaged # with pakistan, there's no alternative to it, but i would argue that having a focus simply on a bilateral relationship is something that's a problem for us. we have to break out of this bilateralism, if you will, the sterile debate, and look at the issues that have to do with pakistan's relationship to india, the sequence of events that take place after 2014 when the americans focus, again, as steve mentioned, when the american focus beco
pakistanis have a narrative that they use us and discard us. use us against the russians in the 1980s, toss us because because of nuclear proliferation in 1990. they use us in the war after 9/11, but after 20 # 14, they are going to go away. you can count on it. pakistanis think americans are hard wired to desert them. this set of stereotypes is intellectually lazy and pernicious. a way to get out of this is haqqani, my counterpart, was the ambassador here, suggest the, time for a divorce, and...
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167
Nov 18, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN2
tv
eye 167
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these stories can either push us forward or hold us back. i think for a while miami has some stories that help i am a bank and no miami has stories moving it forward. even our self-images, our personas are just stories that we tell about ourselves for that other hotel about us. about a year ago i met the actor and director tyler perry. tyler a couple years ago bought delta airlines headquarters in atlanta and needed to some its tv shows and movies. one of the amazing things about tyler and his story is a 1998 tyler was homeless and tyler perry searcy changed his story. i have kind of an unusual story myself. i was born in a small river town on the hudson, newburgh new york. when i was growing up, look magazine called it the all-american city and at that time we had kind of an inner-city, but then we had a lot of harm kids and there was an air force base of the schools will follow the inner-city and harm can and kids who'd been around the world. it was an interesting place to grow up. earlier on my father grew up in the newburgh poorhouse. it
these stories can either push us forward or hold us back. i think for a while miami has some stories that help i am a bank and no miami has stories moving it forward. even our self-images, our personas are just stories that we tell about ourselves for that other hotel about us. about a year ago i met the actor and director tyler perry. tyler a couple years ago bought delta airlines headquarters in atlanta and needed to some its tv shows and movies. one of the amazing things about tyler and his...
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106
Nov 10, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN2
tv
eye 106
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the pakistanis also as a narrative which is the americans use us and discard us. they use is against the russians in the 1980s and tossed us out ostensibly because of nuclear proliferation in 1990. they used us in the war after 9/11 and that after 2014 they will go way. the pakistanis thinks americans are hardwired to desert them. this set of stereotypes is intellectually lazy and very pernicious. one way to get out of this would need what husain haqqani my counterpart, suggested or with others who shall rename nameless facet in the press is time for containment and to push this away. those two are think are not reasonable alternatives. remaining engaged with pakistan, there is no alternative to it but i would argue that having a focus strictly on the bilateral relationship is something that has been a problem for us. what we need to do is break out of this bilateralism, this sterile debate and look at the issues that have to do with pakistan's relationship to india the issues that have to do with the sequence of events that will take place after 2014 when the ame
the pakistanis also as a narrative which is the americans use us and discard us. they use is against the russians in the 1980s and tossed us out ostensibly because of nuclear proliferation in 1990. they used us in the war after 9/11 and that after 2014 they will go way. the pakistanis thinks americans are hardwired to desert them. this set of stereotypes is intellectually lazy and very pernicious. one way to get out of this would need what husain haqqani my counterpart, suggested or with others...
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188
Nov 5, 2012
11/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 188
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tweet us, comment on our facebook wall or send us an e-mail. booktv, nonfiction books on c-span2. >> the same course we have been on will not lead to a better destination. the same path we're on means $20 trillion of debt. means tripling unemployment stagnant take home pay. depressed home values, devastated military, and unless we change course we may be looking at another recession. so, the question of this election comes down to this. do you want more of the same or do you want real change? >> we know what change looks like, and what governor romney: is selling ain't it. giving more power the biggest banks isn't change. another $5 trillion tax cut for the wealthy is not change. refusing to answer questions about the details of your policies until after the election, definitely not change. >> changing the facts when they're inconvenient to your campaign, not change. >> tuesday night, watch live election coverage on c-span2 with president obama from chicago, and mitt romney in boston, plus key house and senate victory and concession speeches fr
tweet us, comment on our facebook wall or send us an e-mail. booktv, nonfiction books on c-span2. >> the same course we have been on will not lead to a better destination. the same path we're on means $20 trillion of debt. means tripling unemployment stagnant take home pay. depressed home values, devastated military, and unless we change course we may be looking at another recession. so, the question of this election comes down to this. do you want more of the same or do you want real...
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129
Nov 6, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 129
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spent likely with some ice going to so all this with us right now. put it behind us. jim antle is the editor of the daily color news foundation a senior editor of "the american spectator," his work is also very "national review online," "the american spectator" online, the american conservative and moderate his writing has been linked by such high-traffic sites as rush limbaugh.com, worldnetdaily, andrew sullivan and lew rockwell.com. even quoted several times in the federalist committee is an expert as of today from escaping from a burning metro cars. ladies and gentlemen, gym and now joins us. >> we been having this discussion if you like to jump in on the tax rates of the clinton era, or whatever else comes to mind. >> i think my experience getting here has kind of alter the composition of the panel. i've become now a radical anarchist. [laughter] i'm now in favor of privatizing all streets, all forms of public transportation but i don't see how it to be a more disorderly process than what already exists. i think you all for your patience but i'm sure you are enter
spent likely with some ice going to so all this with us right now. put it behind us. jim antle is the editor of the daily color news foundation a senior editor of "the american spectator," his work is also very "national review online," "the american spectator" online, the american conservative and moderate his writing has been linked by such high-traffic sites as rush limbaugh.com, worldnetdaily, andrew sullivan and lew rockwell.com. even quoted several times in...
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Nov 16, 2012
11/12
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use the mic. stand up and identify yourself. >> david asked the question whether the president understood economic. i'm asking whether he understands the difference between income or wealth. in the district of columbia there's 80 plus cops who make over $1 10,000 a year, and a good teacher in a bad part of the city teaching something people need can make $145 ,000. rob corp. tell, by the way, they make more than $250,000. do you think they're wealthy? >> i'm not empire -- entirely sure your salary numbers numbers are right. if you looks at what happened to the u.s. over the last thirty years, we had a pulling apart of the income distribution. and the group that particularly well is the top 2%. they quite well when the taxes rose under the clinton years and the situation improved. so the president's economic strategy has been to pursue a balanced approach where we address the fiscal problem that have been building over a long period of time. the economic problem that have been building over a long
use the mic. stand up and identify yourself. >> david asked the question whether the president understood economic. i'm asking whether he understands the difference between income or wealth. in the district of columbia there's 80 plus cops who make over $1 10,000 a year, and a good teacher in a bad part of the city teaching something people need can make $145 ,000. rob corp. tell, by the way, they make more than $250,000. do you think they're wealthy? >> i'm not empire -- entirely...
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Nov 26, 2012
11/12
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not us. the senate used to be a nocturnal place because the majority leaders of both parties would use the fatigue factor to grind down opposition coming from a few people. we almost never do that. don't get me wrong, i say to my friend, the majority leader, i'm not defending the way the place has been run the last two years. i think it's been embarrassing. i have to apologize to my constituents for the way the place is run. but we had the same rules in earlier congresses and didn't have the same problem. and we've always had a few members on each side who wanted to exercise every one of their rights. i remember when i first got here, it was senator metzenbaum from ohio would sit out here on the floor and read every of bill. he was a big problem. nobody tried to change the rules. we worked look, what the majoriy leader conveniently continues to leave out is not only the rule that he wants to change but the way he wants to change it. the way he wants to change it. he wants to establish the pre
not us. the senate used to be a nocturnal place because the majority leaders of both parties would use the fatigue factor to grind down opposition coming from a few people. we almost never do that. don't get me wrong, i say to my friend, the majority leader, i'm not defending the way the place has been run the last two years. i think it's been embarrassing. i have to apologize to my constituents for the way the place is run. but we had the same rules in earlier congresses and didn't have the...
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Nov 7, 2012
11/12
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us. i'm jon kelley. >> i'm laura garcia-cannon. it was nice to see the children growing up right there in the white house. >> the excitement just palpable last night. it was a slim win for president obama but it was not a long night like a lot of people had expected. just before 9:00 local time, president obama declared the projected winner. that is even with the battleground states. >> even with the battleground states that were still outstanding. in the meantime, we will hear from romney's camp as he eventually gave his concession speech as well, thanking his party as well, paul ryan, his wife, his sons. all families giving up so much. >> committed to that. two years. hard core, hard fought battle. >> exactly. it is time to get to work as well. the celebrations continued with so many people. "today in the bay's" tracie potts with more on how night all played out. pretty exciting. >> reporter: good morning, everyone. despite the fact that there is still some vote counting going on, here's what we know. president obama projected to
us. i'm jon kelley. >> i'm laura garcia-cannon. it was nice to see the children growing up right there in the white house. >> the excitement just palpable last night. it was a slim win for president obama but it was not a long night like a lot of people had expected. just before 9:00 local time, president obama declared the projected winner. that is even with the battleground states. >> even with the battleground states that were still outstanding. in the meantime, we will...
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Nov 7, 2012
11/12
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you can join us at politico.com, there's an e-mail that will come directly to us onset. we're going to bring you into the conversation. it's 10:00, the polls have closed in most of the states that will determine the outcome of this election. i would say if you wanted to step back and where do we stand at 10:00 on election night, the big headline, the one headline we know for sure, joe donnelly won the senate seat for democrats in indiana, a huge and what unexpected victory for democrats, makes it almost impossible for republicans to win back the senate. we have declared long ago that the house will stay in republican hands, it now looks like the senate will stay in democratic hands. so it's all down to the presidential race about whether or not we have a status quo, divided government in washington. the early states that have been called are very much looking in barack obama's favor; pennsylvania, michigan, minnesota, wisconsin. four states in the manufacturing belt of this country that the president desperately needed to hold to win re-election, it looks like he's going
you can join us at politico.com, there's an e-mail that will come directly to us onset. we're going to bring you into the conversation. it's 10:00, the polls have closed in most of the states that will determine the outcome of this election. i would say if you wanted to step back and where do we stand at 10:00 on election night, the big headline, the one headline we know for sure, joe donnelly won the senate seat for democrats in indiana, a huge and what unexpected victory for democrats, makes...
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meteorologist tom kierein telling us we might get some snow. we're not going to get too excited, but there is some stuff going to fall out of the sky, right, tom? >>> going to be an early season type of snowfall. we had one back in 1987 on veterans day. we got a foot of snow that day. nothing like that one. there it is, now spinning way east of atlantic city and ocean city. it's got a lot of moisture with it and swinging inland, getting moderate rain right along the coast and the eastern shore from lewis down toward just south of ocean city. and farther west, we are getting sprinkles of light rain right now in washington. there may be a little bit of wet snowflakes mixing in. otherwise, just chilly light rain right now throughout much of the region. and temperatures thankfully all above freezing. it's chilly. you'll need an umbrella here for the next few hours as we have the rain coming through. winter weather advisory north and east, we'll have that for you coming up. for the rest of the day, hour by hour, a wet morning and maybe accumulating
meteorologist tom kierein telling us we might get some snow. we're not going to get too excited, but there is some stuff going to fall out of the sky, right, tom? >>> going to be an early season type of snowfall. we had one back in 1987 on veterans day. we got a foot of snow that day. nothing like that one. there it is, now spinning way east of atlantic city and ocean city. it's got a lot of moisture with it and swinging inland, getting moderate rain right along the coast and the...
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Nov 7, 2012
11/12
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>> we could use additional revenues. there's no doubt we need to restore services in the city of san jose. i was neutral on it because i didn't think it would make much difference. i didn't think it would have an increase in crime or significant increase in revenues. the voters obviously didn't want to approve it if it wasn't going to increase revenues. >> the minimum wage hike did pass. 58% of voters have approved. that's going to add $2 to minimum wage in the city. this is a measure up against. >> i didn't want people to lose jobs. but voters get the last word on these matters. >> mayor chuck reed, thank you very much, it's good to see you this morning. outside the mayor's house. >> that's a good get. we toss it over to christina to talk about the weather that's going down. >> yeah, it's cool out there. hopefully chuck reed's brewing up some nice coffee for our reporter. a foggy golden gate bridge. the fog has returned. the natural coolant is back on. we're going to see temperatures tumble today by about 10, maybe 20 d
>> we could use additional revenues. there's no doubt we need to restore services in the city of san jose. i was neutral on it because i didn't think it would make much difference. i didn't think it would have an increase in crime or significant increase in revenues. the voters obviously didn't want to approve it if it wasn't going to increase revenues. >> the minimum wage hike did pass. 58% of voters have approved. that's going to add $2 to minimum wage in the city. this is a...